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The Effects of Divorce on Men’s Employment and Social Security Histories

Matthijs Kalmijn ()
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Matthijs Kalmijn: Tilburg University

European Journal of Population, 2005, vol. 21, issue 4, No 1, 347-366

Abstract: Abstract Analyses of the economic consequences of divorce have emphasized the negative effect of divorce for women. For men, consequences of divorce are most often believed to be social or psychological. This is not consistent with an economic literature showing the positive effects of marriage on men’s wages. Using a nationally representative life-history survey among men in the Netherlands, this paper reanalyzes the possible negative effects of a divorce for the careers of men. Complete life histories provide information on upward and downward occupational mobility as well as on unemployment and disability. Multivariate event history models show that after divorce, men experience an increased chance of becoming downwardly mobile, an increased chance of becoming unemployed, and an increased chance of becoming disabled. Additional analyses are done to assess whether these effects are spurious, due to the influence of earlier problems that men experienced in their lives, as measured by indicators of employment problems, health problems, and problems in social relationships. While these variables have an effect on the future career, they are not strong enough to eliminate the divorce effect. Implications are discussed for different theoretical hypotheses about the importance of marriage and divorce for men’s employment.

Keywords: divorce; employment; life course; marriage; occupational mobility; social security; aide sociale; cycle de vie; divorce; emploi; mariage; mobilité professionnelle (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
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DOI: 10.1007/s10680-005-0200-7

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